I've been a lurker on these forums, but this is my first post, so greetings

I've always been averse to the noise PCs usually make, and always endeavoured to make something really quiet. So I recently built myself a wooden PC, with a more efficient airflow than a typical ATX case. Nothing new for people who know a thing or two about silent PCs, I suppose, but this is my first silencing project.

A picture is worth a thousand words, but a video is even better so please have a look and tell me what you think!

I have to ask though... as much as I understand the need to build things just for the pure pleasure of creation/tinkering, I don't quite get the logic behind investing both time and money in a near-silent case and then tucking it away in a cabinet.

I had no idea that a case such as the FOrtress FT02 existed, haha! I do think mine's still more efficient air flow wise, however

I can understand your question. I actually didn't originally plan to have it up in the cupboard, though I had always planned the ECU. Having the case up in the cupboard mainly keeps it out of the way, with the added bonus of there being absolutely no noise audible. It's quite something.

If I'd not made it near silent, I think it would be pretty audible still, and the threshold between silent and audible is oh so small

Very impressive rig, and an interesting video! It's worth watching because you've done things very differently from most of what we see, so this is food for thought, even if few people are ambitious enough to follow this path.

Presumably the big fans are rotating quite slowly for maximum silence. You didn't mention components; I chose components for minimum wattage in my latest build (e.g., Ivy Bridge!) so as to have fewer watts heating up the box. But you mentioned overclocking, indicating your priority was speed rather than cool-running.

Ha ha, should I point out that you ought to put the PC box on the floor, since the convection means the box is wallowing in the waste heat of everything in the room?

A good video is efficient for both information and presentation. Well done. Hope to see that control unit later.Some light fabric could be applied to the underside to act as dust filters. I've hobby-restored some furniture in the past and working with cloth gave me a lot of new inspiration on ways to make improvised constructs. Sewing is well worth learning.

Presumably the big fans are rotating quite slowly for maximum silence. You didn't mention components; I chose components for minimum wattage in my latest build (e.g., Ivy Bridge!) so as to have fewer watts heating up the box. But you mentioned overclocking, indicating your priority was speed rather than cool-running.

Yes indeed! The fans are very slow, and sometimes stop entirely when the comp isn't doing anything demanding. The components aren't particularly low wattage though. There's an i7 2600k @ 4.4GHz in there, and a GTX 460 (which is surprisingly very quiet).

Quote:

Ha ha, should I point out that you ought to put the PC box on the floor, since the convection means the box is wallowing in the waste heat of everything in the room?

Haha, good point... thankfully it's a hallway, and a cool one as it never gets the sun.

mkk wrote:

Some light fabric could be applied to the underside to act as dust filters. I've hobby-restored some furniture in the past and working with cloth gave me a lot of new inspiration on ways to make improvised constructs. Sewing is well worth learning.

Hmm, that's a good idea. Is there any kind of fabric that you would recommend?

By the way, the next video about the external control unit has been uploaded (I've recently decided that "External PC Control Hub" is a better name for it). I didn't cover the inside of it, as not too many people will be interested in that, but I will cover it at a later date.

Well sure, pantyhose. Anything reasonably strong while thin and resembling net/mesh will do well. Like insect net, but not the ones with too tiny holes in it. One could find thin metal mesh at some hardware stores I guess, if really sturdy material is desired.

Well sure, pantyhose. Anything reasonably strong while thin and resembling net/mesh will do well. Like insect net, but not the ones with too tiny holes in it. One could find thin metal mesh at some hardware stores I guess, if really sturdy material is desired.

Ah, thank you! I will definitely add something like that to keep the dust out!

lowmotion wrote:

The hard drives are not mounted in the correct angle.

No worries...

Hitachi:

"The drive will operate in all axes (6 directions). Performance and error rate will stay within specification limits if the drive is operated in the other orientations from which it was formatted."

Western Digital:

"Physical mounting of the drive: WD drives will function normally whether they are mounted sideways or upside down (any X, Y, Z orientation)."

Maxtor:

"The hard drive can be mounted in any orientation."

Samsung:

"As long as it is securely attached to the chassis, hard disk drives may be mounted either horizontally or vertically depending on how your computer's case is constructed."

Fabrics and meshes make crap filters. They're fine for removing big stuff like hair, but the 3D structure of foam allows it to capture far more and far smaller particles. Buy some air-conditioner filter foam sheet and cut it to size. The stuff's cheap (I got enough for a dozen 120mm fans for $1.50), much easier to work with, and far more effective. With a bit of stand-off from low-flow fans, the extra restriction won't be a problem.

_________________If you've examined both sides of an argument, you haven't examined enough sides.

Hmm, yeah.. I wish I could get hold of some of that air cond. filter that cheap here in the UK. Looks like it would be perfect.

Oh. Right. The UK is frigid all year-round. Forgot about that.

However, any form of reticulated foam with 30-60 ppi ("pores per inch") will do. PuraPC sells stuff intended specifically for computers, and there's also outdoor furniture foam, aquarium filtration foam, and even puppetry foam (have no idea why reticulated foam is better for puppets, but apparently it is). Probably more expensive to source, but not terribly so.

_________________If you've examined both sides of an argument, you haven't examined enough sides.

Joined: Fri Jul 20, 2007 7:22 pmPosts: 179Location: Sunny Florida, where dead people vote 3 times in a county they never even lived in!

MattP:

Since some people in the UK probably have forced air heating and cooling systems in their houses, there are likely a number of good air conditioning filters available. The link below is to the type I use in my air conditioning system. Select the link for "Best 1" Air Filters."

These filters work a treat in my A/C system. They claim to have electrostatically charged fibers in them that grab all sorts of microscopic nasty things that would blow right through a normal filter.

They are pleated to increase the surface area available for filtration. If you can manage to work a 1" (25.4mm)thick filter under your intake fans, that would be great. If not, then you can always take some of the material and flatten it out. If possible though, it is best to use the filter while it is still pleated. The added surface area will let it collect more dust and things over a longer time, and you won't be having to worry about changing it so often.

The ones that I use are 20" X 20" by 1" thick, cost about $15 to $18 USD, and last about 3 months in our A/C system. Keep in mind that a central A/C system moves much more air through it than a PC does, probably several orders of magnitude more. And, here in Florida, the A/C will run literally constantly, day and night, at times in the summer. Thus I take the filter's ability to last 3 months under those conditions as an indication that it has a very high capacity before it clogs up.

If you can't find these in the UK, you can always search for a filter that is similar in construction.

PS: Your idea for the external control unit for the PC is pure genius. How were you able to extend all the cables that you needed to extend 5 meters? Did you need any signal boosters, or did just long cables work? And, may we assume that you simply extended the mouse, keyboard, and monitor cables the same way, or was something special needed there.

With eager anticipation I will await your video that explains the making of the external control unit, and the cable (I hope).

Joined: Fri Jul 20, 2007 7:22 pmPosts: 179Location: Sunny Florida, where dead people vote 3 times in a county they never even lived in!

MattP wrote:

Great stuff! You'll have to do a build log as you go along. Looking forward to seeing what you come up with, design wise!

A build log is a great idea. With photos, of course. The design depends on a number of factors, one of which is whether or not I can easily and inexpensively get any Gaboon Ebony or Spalted Maple (links to photos below). "Inexpensive" in the same sentence as Gaboon Ebony creates an oxymoron as it sells for around $100 for 1 square foot, 1" thick.

Waiting eagerly. Are you opposed to giving us a little write-up preview?

Not really, it's just that it'll take time away from making the actual video. I'll be covering every little thing in the video though, and it should allow me to explain things a bit more clearly than otherwise.

N7SC wrote:

A build log is a great idea. With photos, of course. The design depends on a number of factors, one of which is whether or not I can easily and inexpensively get any Gaboon Ebony or Spalted Maple (links to photos below). "Inexpensive" in the same sentence as Gaboon Ebony creates an oxymoron as it sells for around $100 for 1 square foot, 1" thick.

Yeah, with the expensive wood, you should probably get some cheap wood and do a prototype with that first. Then when you have any tricks and dimensions worked out, go with the pricey wood. That's what I did with my big brass box (http://www.silentpcreview.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=59803), did it first with cheap roofing steel and then used brass. Although I keep meaning to rebuild that with a wood frame instead of the steel. It would probably get bigger, though. Although my wooden version was smaller (http://www.silentpcreview.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=61400), but the big brass box has a dual xeon motherboard and 20+ hard drives in it now, so a wooden version would have to be bigger.

But good build. It looks like you got the cables routed nicely, that's good. I put the psu and the hard drives on the back so I could route the cables under the bottom and around the sides, but that doesn't go super smoothly sometimes. I like the remote box for the buttons and the optical drive, that is a good idea. Upgrading that stuff separately from the main box would be pretty slick. Although I'm guessing that you're using usb for the optical and cards, so that could limit your speed. I guess you could do the buttons and leds with just regular wire, unless you have something more complicated going on. And I guess you're doing the video separately, so that makes things simpler. But a remote unit plus a machine far away makes for a quiet setup. Great work!

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